UK–France 'one in, one out' Channel crossings deal set to expire in October
France's "one in, one out" asylum deal with the UK — under which migrants arriving by small boat can be forcibly returned to France in exchange for others being brought to the UK legally — is set to expire in October and will reportedly not be renewed, according to French media. The agreement has been a central pillar of British efforts to curb Channel crossings. Its expiry would mark a significant shift in UK-France migration policy.
Hackers who stole a large cache of data from Madison Square Garden gained access by calling a low-level employee and socially engineering them over the phone — a technique known as "vishing." Unlike phishing via email, vishing exploits voice calls and has grown increasingly common among young, native English-speaking cybercriminals. The breach exposed vulnerabilities in MSG's Microsoft Entra identity systems.
The hackers that stole a large cache of data from Madison Square Garden called a low level employee and tricked them into letting the hackers into MSG’s systems, according to the hackers and 404 Media’s review of the stolen data.The breach highlights the risk of social engineering over voice calls, sometimes called ‘vishing’. Whereas phishing, where hackers social engineer someone over email or send them a fake login page, has been common for decades, vishing has only become prevalent more recently, especially as young and native English speaking hackers have become a serious cybersecurity threat.💡Do you know anything else about this hack or others? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at joseph.404 or send me an email at joseph@404media.co.“Employee vishing on their Microsoft Entra,” a member of the hacking group behind the MSG breach, called ShinyHunters, told 404 Media when asked to explain how the group got in. Microsoft Entra is Microsoft’s identity management product, similar to Okta, which lets employees log into whatever tools or services they need to at work.Last week 404 Media reported hackers had uploaded data stolen from MSG. A sample 404 Media reviewed at the time included files mentioning Knicks-related personalities, with fields such as “address,” “claim to fame,” and “cost of talent.” In some cases the data included a risk score for certain celebrities, with actor, director and Knicks fan Ben Stiller described as “Low Risk” and rapper Boogie with da Hoodie marked “High Risk.”Since then 404 Media downloaded the full 45GB data dump and found the contents of a specific MSG employee’s OneDrive. It included work documents, photos, screenshots, and other attachments. A folder called “Personal,” contained the employee’s W-2 form, which included their name and other personal information. This indicated that the breach may have originated from this specific employee. 404 Media found a LinkedIn profile under the same name showing this person worked at MSG. 404 Media is not naming the employee for their privacy.404 Media then asked a member of ShinyHunters how the group breached MSG. The member provided this employee’s name.When 404 Media asked the ShinyHunters member to elaborate on how the group compromised MSG, they pointed to a May blog post from Microsoft, which they said was “about us.” That post described what Microsoft called a “methodical, sophisticated, and multi-layered attack.” It details another attack—the blog post was published May 18 and the ShinyHunters member said the MSG hack happened on June 5—but there are similarities.The Microsoft blog post says hackers first targeted specific people to get their Microsoft Entra credentials. The hackers started the Self-Service Password Reset (SSPR) process, and then tricked users into completing the multifactor authentication prompts that appear legitimate, Microsoft said. “For example, the threat actor might impersonate an internal information technology (IT) support representative and contact the user claiming that their account requires urgent verification, instructing them to approve MFA prompts as part of a routine password reset procedure,” the blog post reads. Once in, the hackers can then pivot onto other apps or systems where data may be stored. In MSG’s case, the dump includes data taken from a SharePoint instance, Microsoft’s sharing and collaboration platform.The ShinyHunters member didn’t elaborate beyond the blog post, but told 404 Media: “We called the employee and had them do the SSPR process,” referring specifically to the MSG hack. Law firm Morgan and Morgan has filed a class action lawsuit related to the breach, arguing MSG’s surveillance of visitors led to it. When asked if ShinyHunters targeted MSG because of the venue’s surveillance practices, the member said, “Yes we thought they would pay for that reason but they surprisingly did not.”MSG did not respond to a request for comment.404 Media reported this week the data dump contained a dossier on activists who had opposed MSG’s facial recognition program.
Phoebe Bridgers has announced her new album titled "Lost Weekend," the follow-up to her critically acclaimed 2020 record "Punisher." The announcement came after a string of phoneless pop-up shows held across the United States. No release date has been confirmed yet.
Netflix unveiled first-look footage for "Ray Gunn," a noir sci-fi animated feature directed by Brad Bird, at the Annecy animation festival. The streamer also announced "Ghostbusters: Night Shift" as part of its December Oscar campaign. Netflix additionally acquired the Cannes title "In Waves" for its lineup.
Polish Airports State Enterprise (PPL) closed 2024 with a record net profit exceeding 1 billion PLN. The airports managed by PPL, including Warsaw Chopin Airport, handled an all-time high number of passengers. The company announced plans for continued traffic growth and multi-billion-zloty infrastructure investments.
Psychologists highlight that highly intelligent people tend to fill their free time with activities demanding focus, engagement, and continuous learning. Habits such as reading, problem-solving, and skill-building are frequently cited as markers of higher cognitive ability. Experts suggest that how we use leisure time may meaningfully influence overall brain health and function.
Taylor Fritz, the most decorated player in the history of the ATP 250 tournament in Eastbourne, withdrew from this year's edition on Wednesday, ruling out a bid for a fifth title. The American has won the event four times previously. No reason for the withdrawal was given.
Seth Klarman of The Baupost Group, known as the "Buffett of Boston," warned that investors currently find themselves in a "vulnerable place" due to a supply-demand imbalance in capital markets. He argues that American corporations are demanding more capital than the market can comfortably provide. This structural mismatch could make it increasingly difficult for investors to achieve adequate returns.
Taiwan's military is conducting five-day exercises simulating a scenario in which China converts its routine maneuvers around the island into a real invasion. Tanks were deployed on city streets and highways as part of the drills. Taiwan's defense minister stressed the need to verify the military's ability to respond immediately to a sudden attack.
Blepharoplasty, the surgical correction of drooping eyelids, is one of the most demanding facial procedures, combining elements of plastic surgery and ophthalmology. Though often seen purely as cosmetic, the operation carries significant medical complexity and must be performed only by a qualified specialist. Experts caution against seeking the procedure outside a certified medical setting.
Sky News world affairs editor Sam Kiley argues in an opinion piece that Putin's request for peace talks signals weakness and that Ukraine and its allies should seize the moment to force the collapse of Russia's military. Kiley contends this is also an opportunity for Donald Trump to claim a diplomatic win, creating leverage for a favorable settlement. He urges the West not to grant Russia a ceasefire on its own terms.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky announced on Wednesday that Russia is relocating air defense systems from occupied Ukrainian territories to protect Moscow and the Crimean Bridge following long-range Ukrainian drone strikes. The redeployment leaves Russian-held frontline areas with reduced air defense coverage. The shift could give Ukraine greater freedom to strike previously protected positions in the occupied zones.
All 48 teams at the 2026 FIFA World Cup have now played exactly two group-stage matches. An analysis highlights the standout players and nations who have impressed, as well as those who have disappointed so far in the tournament. The review covers both individual performers and collective team results heading into the final group round.
In a personal opinion piece, a Polish writer reflects on the overwhelming hype surrounding GTA 6 — from its trailer featuring alligators, a muscle car, a bank heist and a female protagonist to the opening of preorders. He declares he will simply wait rather than joining the frenzy, satirizing the industry's tendency to treat every Rockstar announcement as a national event. The piece is a cultural commentary on gaming hype culture, not a news report on the game itself.
Accenture is scrambling to stop non-technical employees from burning through the company's AI token budget on trivial tasks like converting PDFs to presentation slides, according to leaked audio obtained by 404 Media. Uber has capped employee access to AI tools including Claude Code and Cursor after its CTO revealed the company burned through its entire AI budget in just four months. The shift from flat-fee to per-token pricing by providers like GitHub is accelerating cost overruns across the industry, signaling the end of uninhibited AI spending growth.
Consulting giant Accenture is trying to figure out how to stop non-technical workers from blowing through companies’ AI token budget on trivial tasks like converting PDFs to presentation slides, according to leaked audio obtained by 404 Media. Across the industry Accenture is seeing “soaring token spend,” according to the audio.The news highlights a major shift in the tech industry and other companies that use AI: the wave of uninhibited AI growth is over. Some AI providers like GitHub are now charging customers per token rather than a flat subscription fee, leading some companies to burn through their tokens. Uber recently capped employees’ use of AI tools like Claude Code and Cursor; that came after Uber told employees to use AI as much as possible and Uber’s CTO said the company had blown its entire AI budget in four months. And Accenture itself reportedly started requiring senior staff to start using AI or risk losing out on promotions. It also undercuts the narrative that superpowered engineers generating mountains of code are behind the AI boom. In many cases it is non-technical staff burning through tokens for non-specialized tasks.💡Do you know anything else about token spend inside tech companies? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at joseph.404 or send me an email at joseph@404media.co.“We’re seeing from some of the data internally at least that it’s actually not our engineers that are driving the token consumption. It’s a lot of the non-engineers that are doing some of those behaviors [...] you were talking about,” Justice Kwak, Accenture’s agentic AI strategy lead, said in a recent internal meeting, according to the audio obtained by 404 Media.At one point in the meeting, Kwak and Eduardo Salamanca de Diego, senior manager of product management at the company’s Center for Advanced AI, start presenting about what is described as “token ops.”Kwak says he knows people aren’t using slides these days, but he has some. As he appears to be preparing to present, Stuart Henderson, Accenture’s client group lead, interrupts. He jokes he hopes Kwak didn’t just convert a PDF into images and then into markdown files. “I’m learning that’s one of the big token chewers,” Henderson says. “Turning PDFs into markdown: is that right?”That’s when Kwak says that’s what Accenture’s own data shows. “What we’re seeing right now is just rapid escalation in AI token spend,” he says “As companies start to scale AI, moving from like simple chatbots into use cases that feature agentic workflows and automation and then enterprise-wide deployment of some of these tools like Copilot, Claude Code, and Codex, we’re hitting this inflection point where AI is becoming material to the cost structure; spend is becoming very unpredictable; and leadership, especially at the CFO, COO, and CIO level, are still asking the question of whether they’re getting value from what we’re spending on in the context of AI.” “It’s really not a niche problem. It is a problem that every enterprise will face if they are bullish on AI, if they haven’t already,” he adds. The amount of token spending is increasing “exponentially, as more and more people are starting to use AI.”Kwak says after Accenture tried to get enterprises to adopt AI as quickly as possible, AI has reached scale in most areas in both Accenture and its clients. But with that scale is a new opportunity for Accenture regarding its clients: “to really think about token economics.” The bill of the overall AI spend is visible, Kwok explains, but attributing that AI spend at the token level to the value outcomes on the projects where AI is being used is not visible. Finally, the “controls are just arriving too late.” Those are things that might stop someone spending a bunch of money on tokens, like budgeting or different tiers.Following the Financial Times’ reporting of Accenture’s policy to force AI adoption or risk missing promotions, an Accenture spokesperson told CNBC, “Our strategy is to be the reinvention partner of choice for our clients and to be the most client-focused, AI-enabled, great place to work. That requires the adoption of the latest tools and technologies to serve our clients most effectively.”Kwak says Accenture plans to formally launch a product called “Token IQ” soon. Accenture did not respond to a request for comment.As 404 Media has reported, some startups have bragged about how much they’ve spent on AI instead of human workers. Walmart also capped its staff’s use of AI tools following high demand.
Polish actress Joanna Jabłczyńska posted a video of herself swimming in a river, wearing a leopard-print bikini that caught followers' attention. When asked about the swimsuit, she revealed she has worn it for five years and owns clothes she has kept for up to 20 years. Her response became a spontaneous endorsement of slow fashion and conscious consumption.
Priyanka Chopra Jonas spoke at the Cannes Lions conference on Wednesday, discussing her ambitions as a producer and her desire to expand her career in the United States. She cited the low-budget horror hit "Obsession" as evidence that Hollywood's barriers to entry for new talent and filmmakers are falling. She argued that in today's industry, ideas are the true currency.
A new poll by the Kyiv International Institute of Sociology shows that a large majority of Ukrainians support finding a constructive resolution to historical disputes with Poland. More than half of respondents believe each country has the right to its own interpretation of history and should not interfere in how other nations view theirs. The results indicate public appetite for dialogue despite ongoing tensions between the two countries.
Rockstar Games has confirmed that physical copies of Grand Theft Auto 6 will not include a disc — instead, the box will contain only a download code. The announcement also revealed pre-order details, the game's price, the Ultimate Edition contents, and pre-order bonuses. Physical edition buyers will receive an early preload date ahead of the game's launch.
Critical Role CEO Travis Willingham has revealed that the company has considered producing a Marvel-style "What If...?" series exploring alternate scenarios within the world of Exandria. He stressed that Critical Role's expansion plans go beyond animated adaptations and include video games and books. Willingham emphasised there is still a great deal of story left to tell in the Exandria universe.
The polar research station Tara is set to depart from France next month on the Tara Polaris I expedition to the Arctic Ocean. The 26-metre research vessel will be deliberately trapped in drifting Arctic pack ice. A crew of 12 will spend eight months conducting scientific research in the central Arctic region.
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